- John Roderick (correspondent)
Infobox Person
name = John Roderick
birth_date = birth date|1914|9|15
birth_place =Waterville, Maine ,United States
death_date = death date and age|2008|3|11|1915|1|30
death_place =Honolulu, Hawaii ,United States
occupation = Author and journalistJohn Roderick (
September 15 ,1914 cite news |first=|last=|title=John Roderick, Veteran AP correspondent whose friendship with China’s leaders helped to pave the way for Nixon’s visit to Beijing |url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/obituaries/article3612338.ece |work=The Times |publisher= |date=2008-03-25 |accessdate=2008-04-06] –March 11 ,2008 ) was an Americanjournalist andforeign correspondent for theAssociated Press news service . Roderick was best known for coveringMao Zedong and other ChineseCommunist guerillas while living with them in acave during the mid-1940s. cite news |first=|last=|title=John Roderick; AP Correspondent Captured a Changing China |url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/03/12/AR2008031204172.html|work=Associated Press |publisher=Washington Post |date=2008-03-13 |accessdate=2008-04-06] cite news |first=|last=|title=Longtime Associated Press China-watcher John Roderick dies at 93 |url=http://www.boston.com/news/local/maine/articles/2008/03/11/longtime_associated_press_china_watcher_john_roderick_dies_at_93/|work=Associated Press |publisher=Boston Globe |date=2008-03-11 |accessdate=2008-04-06] cite news |first=|last=|title=John Roderick, 93; leading China watcher for AP |url=http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/california/la-me-roderick1apr01,1,3740552.story |work=Associated Press |publisher=Los Angeles Times |date=2008-04-01 |accessdate=2008-04-06] Roderick continued to cover China throughout the rest of his career. He was considered to be a leading "China watcher," who covered the country from before the Chinese Communist victory of 1949 to the economic reforms during the 1980s. He was once praised byChinese Premier Zhou Enlai as the man who "opened the door" to China for foreignnews media .Roderick's career as a
correspondent with the Associated Press spanned over fifty years, with postings inAsia ,Europe and theMiddle East . Roderick reopened the Associated Pressbureau inBeijing in 1979. He continued to work with the AP as a special correspondent for the two decades following his retirement in 1984.Early life
John Roderick was born in
Waterville, Maine , onSeptember 14 ,1914 . He was orphaned when he was just 16 years old. His journalistic career began at the age of 15, when he began writing for a local newspaper, Waterville Morning Sentinel (now called The Central Maine Morning Sentinel). He graduated from Colby College before joining the Associated Press office inPortland, Maine , in 1937.Roderick moved to the Associated Press' office in
Washington D.C. in 1942. However, he was drafted into theUnited States Army in 1943 duringWorld War II . He was assigned to theOffice of Strategic Services , which was a precursor of theCIA , and sent to the city ofKunming, China , which is the capital ofYunnan province. Kunming was a strategically important city at the end of theBurma Road with a largeUnited States military base . He rejoined the Associated Press after the end of World War II.China
Roderick remained in China as an Associated Press reporter after World War II. His first major postwar assignment was to cover the breakdown in relations between the Chinese nationalist
Kuomintang government and the Chinese Communist forces led byMao Zedong . The two sides had collaborated to fight the Japanese during World War II, but had turned on each other following the defeat ofJapan . Like many of the other American, British andAustralian war correspondents, Roderick was a military veteran of a war (World War II).Roderick was 31 years old when he began living with leaders of the Chinese Communist rebel movement for seven months between 1945 and 1947. He resided with the rebel leadership, who included Mao Zedong,
Zhou Enlai ,Jiang Qing and other guerilla leaders, at their headquarters in a series of caves inYan'an , China. The city of Yan'an, which is located in central China, had been devastated by Japanese aerial bombings in 1938. Thus, by the mid-1940s it was largely composed of thousands of caves which had been dug out of the hills that surrounded the city and the nearbyGobi Desert . The Communist rebels, as well asreporters , such as Roderick, used the caves as a place to live and conduct their raids against their Japanese and Kuomintang opponents. Mao Zedong had been based in the city since 1935 as Ya'an was at the end of Mao'sLong March .Roderick lived at Ya'an (also called Yenan) in the same way as everyone else, including the Communist leadership.He lived and slept in a tiny cave with a makeshift bed and a
pillow filled with sand. He filed his reports and typed out stories with a portabletypewriter , which was next to acharcoal brazier . He observed Mao Zedong and other leaders during meal times, dances and lectures, which he would later chronicled in his book, "Covering China."Roderick initially admired Mao Zedong and his supporters for their ideas saying, "I admired the fact that they were trying to do something for the poor Chinese." However, unlike other reporters, such as
Edgar Snow , Roderick was never a full supporter of their goals. His opinion of Mao became much more negative following Mao takeover of China. Roderick disliked the brutality of Mao's rule which he observed, as well as the failure of many of his policies, such as theCultural Revolution of the 1960s. Roderick famously calledJiang Qing (Mme Mao ) “that evil bitch” long before she became known as a key member of theGang of Four during the 1970s.After he left Ya'an, Roderick covered the breakdown of peace talks between the Communists and the Kuomintang as well as the ensuing
Chinese Civil War fromBeijing . He continued to cover the Chinese Civil War fromShanghai ,Nanjing and Beijing.In 1948, Roderick was sent by the Associated Press to the Middle East to cover the establishment of the state of Israel. However, he remained engaged with China and its politics throughout his career. Though he often worked outside of China, he became known as a leading "China watcher" during the 1950s. He often studied scraps of information and Chinese Communist government news dispatches for clues to what was going on behind the scenes in China. Roderick though disliked to be called a "China watcher."
British
Reuters correspondentDavid Chipp was allowed to open a Reuters news office in Beijing in 1956, passing over Roderick and the Associated Press. (TheBritish government had informal relations with the Communist government at the time, while theAmerican government did not.) Roderick was forced to report on China fromHong Kong andTokyo . Finally, in 1971 Roderick was able to return to China when he accompanied the United States ping pong team on a trip to the country in 1971. The so called "Ping Pong Diplomacy " was the first time that Americans had been invited to China since 1949.Roderick was able to reopen the Associated Press
bureau in Beijing in 1979, following the normalization of diplomatic relations between the United States and the People's Republic of China. He became head of the Beijing bureau.Other AP assignments
Roderick was sent to the
Middle East from China in 1948. He arrived in the city ofAmman ,Jordan , just two weeks after the creation of the state ofIsrael . He covered the assassination ofUnited Nations officialCount Folke Bernadotte inJerusalem by the Israeli extremist group, Lehi.He next went to
London and spent five years inParis in the 1950s. He covered the fall of the Frenchgarrison atDien Bien Phu in 1954 inVietnam . He was later posted again in Paris and Hong Kong.Roderick was posted to
Tokyo ,Japan , during the late 1950s. In 1959, Roderick became acquainted with the Takishita family. Roderick purchased the family's a 250-year-oldfarmhouse in Kamakura, Japan. The home was in a terrible state of disrepair at the time due to years of neglect. Roderick decided to renovate and rebuild the home. The renovations were completed byYoshihiro Takishita , anarchitect , who is also known as Yochan. Roderick, who never married and had no children of his own, adopted Yochan as his son. Roderick later wrote about his experiences with the then 273 year old Kamakura farmhouse and its restoration in his book, "Minka: My Farmhouse in Japan", which was published by thePrinceton Architectural Press in 2007.Roderick was named a "Associated Press special correspondent" in 1977, becoming on of the AP's few reporters to hold the title.
He returned to Tokyo in 1980 as a special correspondent, one year after reopening the AP's office in Beijing. He was given a great deal of creative and journalistic freedom to travel throughout
Asia and report on stories of interest to him.Roderick reluctantly retired from active work at the Associated Press in 1984 at the age of 70. He later described himself as retiring "prematurely." However, he continued to report for the AP. The
Japanese government awarded him with theOrder of the Sacred Treasure for his work in reporting on Japanese and Asian issues in 1985.Following his retirement, Roderick continued to write background stories on the Middle East and China. He spent much of his retirement at his restored farmhouse in Kamakura. He even wrote about his own 92nd birthday, in which the Associated Press honored him with a champagne lunch in 2006 in
New York City . Also in 2006, Roderick began writing a series of monthlyarticle s concerning China as part of his coverage of the upcoming 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing.Death
John Roderick completed his last piece for the Associated Press, a personal reflection, in February 2008. He died of
heart failure andpneumonia at his apartment inHonolulu, Hawaii , onMarch 11 ,2008 , at the age of 93.References
External links
* [http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/obituaries/article3612338.ece The Times: John Roderick, Veteran AP correspondent whose friendship with China’s leaders helped to pave the way for Nixon’s visit to Beijing]
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